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Jennifer Lipman

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Jennifer Lipman,

Jennifer Lipman

Opinion

They were loyal British Jews and their graves should say it

September 25, 2013 14:56
2 min read

"Our loyalty and devotion – richly fully and completely deserved by this blessed land — impels us as Jewish citizens of this country to sacrifice ourselves in its aid at this hour of its need.”

So wrote a correspondent of the Jewish Chronicle in December 1914, as the war that was supposed to be over by Christmas showed little sign of abating. And indeed, British Jews enlisted in their thousands, as Jewish mothers joined Christian ones in bidding their sons goodbye.

Visiting the First World War cemeteries of France and Belgium, I remember being struck by how strangely beautiful they were. Row upon row of neat white gravestones, perfectly maintained in green fields and with flowers planted beside them, they spoke not of the bloodshed of the trenches, but of the importance of remembrance and recognition.

Walking around, I sought out the graves of the Jewish soldiers, clearly identified with Magen Davids, and placed a stone on them, aware that these men could have been friends of my great-grandfathers, wondering whether they had any kind of Jewish burial.

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